L
littlenothing
Guest
Help me out. When I hear those buzzwords I cringe. Let me give some examples, because I am better at that than brute logic.
Example 1. In my daughters highschool religion book, the question was to define some tenets of the mission of Jesus. The answer? Work for social justice. My problem with that: I thought it was the salvation of souls. Work for social justice? What is the book even trying to say? He wax some kind of activist?
Example 2. In the medieval field, we are inundated with talk about disparities. The examples we are given are always the poor (who generally have medicaid), racial minorities (who aren’t given less care because of their race) and the underserved (not sure that means the same thing to everyone in every place). My problem? The most underserved people I see are those with privathe insurance and decent jobs who can’t afford all the copays and time off work.
Example 3. A Catholic coworker, upon the election of Papa Francis, said she’s really impressed with this pope because he loves the poor. My problem with that is thinking, “what you think papa Ben didn’t?”
No, I’m not a Papa Francis detractor. I don’t hate the poor or folks on medicaid. I just don’t understand the seeming love of the poor simply because if their apparent financial status or if everyone has even thought all these terms through! My biggest issue is the OSV textbook seeming to misstate the mission of Jesus.
I am not trying to be obtuse or argumentative, really. I just want to know how to discern the truth from some kind of popular tripe. Thanks, guys.
Example 1. In my daughters highschool religion book, the question was to define some tenets of the mission of Jesus. The answer? Work for social justice. My problem with that: I thought it was the salvation of souls. Work for social justice? What is the book even trying to say? He wax some kind of activist?
Example 2. In the medieval field, we are inundated with talk about disparities. The examples we are given are always the poor (who generally have medicaid), racial minorities (who aren’t given less care because of their race) and the underserved (not sure that means the same thing to everyone in every place). My problem? The most underserved people I see are those with privathe insurance and decent jobs who can’t afford all the copays and time off work.
Example 3. A Catholic coworker, upon the election of Papa Francis, said she’s really impressed with this pope because he loves the poor. My problem with that is thinking, “what you think papa Ben didn’t?”
No, I’m not a Papa Francis detractor. I don’t hate the poor or folks on medicaid. I just don’t understand the seeming love of the poor simply because if their apparent financial status or if everyone has even thought all these terms through! My biggest issue is the OSV textbook seeming to misstate the mission of Jesus.
I am not trying to be obtuse or argumentative, really. I just want to know how to discern the truth from some kind of popular tripe. Thanks, guys.